A Las Vegas man who murdered his neighbor as a teenager, and who was later granted mandatory parole under two Nevada laws, would go on to kill two people and shoot a third before killing himself.
Пікірлер: 2 300
@user-st1ui9hv2zАй бұрын
Stop letting killers out of prison.
@donteatdirt200Ай бұрын
What do you expect from Democrats
@BULLHOGBEATSАй бұрын
ban tiktok or get out the way
@thomasgriffin8269Ай бұрын
I second that
@Molly_WАй бұрын
Absolutely! Also they need to stop letting child predators out of prison as well. There are some of these criminals who just cannot be rehabilitated.
@grimmwicked313Ай бұрын
Tiktok isn't what release this monster from prison though The supreme Court did.
@pablohassan6897Ай бұрын
'Killer' and 'released' should NEVER be in the same sentence.
@donoscar4803Ай бұрын
Killer will not be released?
@ThomasRogan-gc5piАй бұрын
STOP putting liberals on parole boards! It doesn't Work 😢
@ssgemactv177517 күн бұрын
@@donoscar4803 shouldn't be
@Jianju698 сағат бұрын
-and yet you have done it just now.
@dsaturdayfwight7516Ай бұрын
If the victim doesn't get a 2nd chance the criminal shouldn't either
@philliphall519813 күн бұрын
I agree, a eye for a eye
@tt14life908 күн бұрын
Bingo
@guesswhat-chickenbutt7 күн бұрын
Fukkin fakts
@turtle19dadАй бұрын
I like the Florida Sheriff who said “ A criminal who is shot has ZERO chance to reoffend.”
@bojohannesen4352Ай бұрын
Ok, bootlicker
@ssgemactv177517 күн бұрын
Grady Judd is hilarious
@mick8888V4 күн бұрын
a "criminal" is kind of vague to mandate the death penalty via being shot. Maybe if revised to a "murderer" it might be a little bit different. Nonetheless, the death penalty is not upheld federally, it remains per each state. Grady has some great one liners and processes a lot of "bad dudes"...but he's extremely a biased showman that loves to glorify things and be in the spotlight. I wonder what it is about his area of Florida that attracts so many criminals and allows them to thrive until they're caught?
@thadrobinson83434 күн бұрын
@@mick8888V Simple answer, Florida doesn't get cold enough to freeze the riffraff out. Cali has a similar issue.
@mick8888V4 күн бұрын
@@thadrobinson8343 if climate warming is true, we might be in a heap of trouble then.
@pamelashiflett5281Ай бұрын
Judges and parole board should be held accountable.
@marksprinkleАй бұрын
Why? It was mandatory parole based on laws passed by Democrats in the legislature. The judge tried putting him away forever, but your elected legislators thought they knew better. The parole board had no choice.
@rodrigopereira3449Ай бұрын
You mean the activists should be held accountable
@uffdad8211Ай бұрын
@@marksprinkle The Republican controlled US Supreme Court issued the ruling that convicted minors could not be jailed indefinitely after 20 years. Blame the GOP for this, not the Dems.
@mattr1554Ай бұрын
@@uffdad8211 How about this? STOP POINTING FINGERS at two sides of the same stupid coin. THEY ARE ALL THE SAME. BLAME POLITICIANS, PERIOD. You brainwashed people living under the illusion that you have a choice are almost worse than this murderer and the politicians that allowed this to happen. WAKE UP.
@mattr1554Ай бұрын
@@uffdad8211 And, if you took the time to look the bill up and read who the sponsors were on it, you would see that they were ALL Democrats: Rep. Selena Torres [D] Sen. Fabian Donate [D] Sen. Edgar Flores [D] Rep. Reuben D'Silva [D] Rep. Bea Duran [D] Rep. Cecelia Gonzalez [D] Rep. Brittney Miller [D] Rep. Duy Nguyen [D] Sen. Rochelle Nguyen [D]
@TheClonemenotАй бұрын
A guy killed a family member of mine. He was caught and got 25 to life. The parole board was supposed to give us notice when he is up for parole. 12 years goes by. I checked with the prison. They had let him out a year ago. So much for notice and so much for 25 to life.
@deaddropsd1972Ай бұрын
Pathetic system
@earthstewardudeАй бұрын
The whole system is effed to the max. We humans are breeding and educating these people to be like this. It's getting worse too because of mass media.
@Lincoln_Hawk23Ай бұрын
That's crazy
@mojito-alongtimeagoАй бұрын
You waited 12 years to check? I check on an inmate every few months. I want to know, not just if he got out somehow, but if he was moved to a prison closer to where I live. I do receive emails every time he is moved or is transferred to a temporary hold for court. More importantly, sorry to hear your murderer was set free.
@hjmismАй бұрын
An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. I often wish we lived in times where forensics and the online data base for LEO's didn't exist yet.
@TheCityWokGuyАй бұрын
“The rights of criminals are given more respect than the privacy of their victims”
@CatherineSToddАй бұрын
"than the privacy and SAFETY of their victims”"
@uncaringconch7jake682Ай бұрын
If they are released.. the ones releasing should be held accountable
@CatJuarezАй бұрын
The parole board is notorious for not notifying victims when a prisoner is released.
@rebeccaleegabbardАй бұрын
I had this happen to me! I signed up to be notified for when my ex husband was released. Never got a notification, thank goodness my mom did.
@Harlem55Ай бұрын
And where does the U.S. constitution say that victims have any distinct rights whatsoever? Victims properly have no rights.
@kl0wnkiller912Ай бұрын
How do you decide that the Constitution has any bearing on this situation? You are aware that there are other laws beside the Constitution, right?@@Harlem55
@donteatdirt200Ай бұрын
What do you expect from Democrats
@Ladywolf2263Ай бұрын
@@rebeccaleegabbardsame. But this time when he came after me, I was ‘ well trained ‘. He’s alive …. Hehehe if you can call it at. Then I was the 1 threatened with a prison sentence. Thank you God, I had a good lawyer…and a great police department.
@avawilliams4227Ай бұрын
Stop coddling criminals.
@whodoesntlikesurfingАй бұрын
Sure, right after you guys stop coddling Kyle Rittenhouse
@iMatti00Ай бұрын
But… Isn’t it interesting how many Scandinavian countries (like Switzerland and the Netherlands and such, And several EU countries like Germany) have dramatically lower prison sentences, nicer prisons, less crime, and once you get out of prison you’re recidivism rate is extremely low compared to the USA. A lot of those countries have an average prisons of no more than 11-14 years for murder. So if you had a choice between harsh punishments like in the USA but more crime and more repeat criminals, or a much softer system like in those countries I mentioned but society was much better off, which would you prefer? Would you prefer the emotional gratification a vengeance but it lead to more crime and more violence.d
@Matt-xv2cpАй бұрын
@@whodoesntlikesurfing that is by far, the dumbest comment EVER posted on KZfaq, and most likely, in the history of written word. We are all now dumber for having read it.
@avawilliams4227Ай бұрын
@@whodoesntlikesurfing Kyle Rittenhouse verdict: Not guilty Eat it
@avawilliams4227Ай бұрын
@@iMatti00 tldr
@303junglist7Ай бұрын
The person who let him out should be held accountable for it
@teresaboone893Ай бұрын
Never let killer's out of prison .
@ChiefMiddleFingerАй бұрын
Psychopaths are good at lying.
@susan9498Ай бұрын
True.
@I_Fight_InstacartАй бұрын
It shouldn't have been difficult to see, the way he was reading his little prepared statement like a freaking robot.
@joannemurdock7899Ай бұрын
And ALLEGEDLY narcists are too
@timelapsegaАй бұрын
@@joannemurdock7899 There is no alleged, narcissists are indeed good liars, they've had a lifetime of practice.
@reidpinchback8850Ай бұрын
@@joannemurdock7899a narcissist you can at least have decent hope of effective psychiatric treatment that could be part of a condition for release. While a psychopath doesn't have to be violent, you can't really "fix" psychopathy as it is largely an organic condition not learned behavior.
@adabongАй бұрын
there should never be a second chance for a murderer ever.
@allesasmartАй бұрын
Agree, I find it really weird ...what was the winning argument that turned this into law...give killers a chance to redeem themselves? Allow them back out in society?
@kmetzz16 күн бұрын
@@allesasmart I think probably about money. It costs a lot to feed people and run prisons.
@garfield24394 күн бұрын
Came here to say exactly that! NEVER!!!
@garfield24394 күн бұрын
@@kmetzz1worst reason ever
@brt52733 күн бұрын
They can have a second chance, IN PRISON! That should be their life and they can choose to be productive and make a difference IN PRISON. There's plenty who do, so I don't understand the "second chance" concept as an excuse to release them back into society.
@AmberKateD1995Ай бұрын
This wasn't an accidental murder by a teen who was in the wrong place at the wrong time, or made a simple mistake due to being young and stupid. That boy viciously STABBED a man to death! That is what should be taken into consideration when these cases come up and people want to say "well they were so young...". I promise you that most EVIL people don't magically become good people after a prison sentence. If anything, they become worse. He should've NEVER been released.
@annazaman965727 күн бұрын
And we still don't know why. That's a dangerous person who will kill for nothing
@brt52733 күн бұрын
Absolutely TRUE!
@listenquitely2888Ай бұрын
Charge those who released him. Once you kill someone, why do you deserve to ever be free?
@jomish8719Ай бұрын
PAROLE BOARD IS A USELESS PIECE OF CRAP !!!
@becky6568Ай бұрын
Full of criminal lovers .
@gasmith7486Ай бұрын
Blue states. Stop voting blue!!
@stargatisАй бұрын
Look up Jesse McFadden if you want to get angrier
@donteatdirt200Ай бұрын
What do you expect from Democrats
@ThatOpalGuyАй бұрын
but treat everyone like you want to be treated, right?
@GeneralTso-nl8tkАй бұрын
Interesting how the victims never get a second chance. Stop releasing demons back onto our streets!
@TheMonica82Ай бұрын
Amen!!
@bojohannesen4352Ай бұрын
Don't be so dramatic.
@people_are_sheepКүн бұрын
Just goes to show your vote in western nations does not mean a thing. This will only be solved by force outside of Government
@bobsymonds208Ай бұрын
This whole failed system is repulsive. Hold the worthless people 100% accountable. And stop the soft approach on them.
@tracytreadway6064Ай бұрын
Any 15 year old capable of murder for no reason is a lifetime danger! Shame on stupid laws allowing these monsters out!
@75fordhamАй бұрын
What a DISGRACE!!! Nobody takes responsibility.
@domv7Ай бұрын
No one is held responsible.
@ggcatbelladogantics2959Ай бұрын
It was the law in this case.
@krane15Ай бұрын
One things for sure, when you make a decision and somebody dies because of it then you need to step down.
@timothykohout9503Ай бұрын
It's the government, you're expecting accountability and competence? There is nothing so immoral and unreliable as the government.
@largelesterАй бұрын
@@krane15 More like need to be held accountable and go to prison 2nd degree homicide or criminal negligence!
@RoseNZiegАй бұрын
this case is exactly why a life sentence should be a life sentence. if the killer wanted a life, why commit crimes in the first place?
@iMatti00Ай бұрын
But… Isn’t it interesting how many Scandinavian countries (like Switzerland and the Netherlands and such, And several EU countries like Germany) have dramatically lower prison sentences, nicer prisons, less crime, and once you get out of prison you’re recidivism rate is extremely low compared to the USA. A lot of those countries have an average prisons of no more than 11-14 years for murder. So if you had a choice between harsh punishments like in the USA but more crime and more repeat criminals, or a much softer system like in those countries I mentioned but society was much better off, which would you prefer? Would you prefer the emotional gratification a vengeance but it lead to more crime and more violence.b
@AliciaGuitarАй бұрын
@@iMatti00 correlation does not equal causation. you don't know that the lower crime rate is a direct result of less prisons. Don't those countries also offer a year for family leave for both parents when they have a baby? Maybe the family dynamic is stronger there leading to better adapted individuals and less crime, thus less prisons!
@dr.emilschaffhausen4683Ай бұрын
IMatt, a rather homogeneous population and different cultural values makes a world of difference. What kind of gang problems do they have over there? Yeah, that's right.
@boyce5994Ай бұрын
@@iMatti00 completely different culture over there, I doubt they got generations of kids festering, looking up to the grimiest guy in their town because he wears Kangol 😂😂, learning from him how to rock up coke and what a 20 piece looks like. And race has nothing to do with it, I just described white kids from my area.
@boyce5994Ай бұрын
They just found and old friend of mine dead in a dumpster from shooting up. Wonder how often that happens in Switzerland lol.
@jenniferrapacon2944Ай бұрын
Judges need to be held accountable for not using common sense
@HomeMainАй бұрын
I wasn't made aware of my attacker's release. He approached me at my job! I was 16 when he changed my life for the worse. I was 25 when he tried to finish what he started. The system is broken and there will be no fixing it. It's too far gone for help.
@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307Ай бұрын
Why did your killer wanted to kill you? What did you do to piss him off?
@DaveyOH-ig6xvАй бұрын
@@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307 You just answered your own dumbass question, reject troll.
@robertsmith2956Ай бұрын
@@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307 probably the usual democrat reason, she violated his right for her to need an abortion. If women aren't r*ped, they can't yell EXCEPTION.....
@adriennem792727 күн бұрын
@@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307go crawl back into the whole you came from bot troll
@thedesensitizedsympathizer530727 күн бұрын
@@adriennem7927 I'm not a bot or a troll.
@t.h.8475Ай бұрын
When I was a kid, there was a girl who was kidnapped, beaten, raped dragged through a corn field by a pickup truck, and set on fire. They identified her by her jewelry. A man was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. He got out in 20 years. Life in prison was considered 40 years. In Indiana, you get a free day for every "good" day that you serve. Thus, he served 20 years. She never got her life back, never graduated high school or got married, and had kids. Edit: BTW, I was a child at the time of the murder and I am going off of my memory. I looked it up and couldn't find anything about the fire, and the article I found said he was sentenced to 20 years.
@angeladay1534Ай бұрын
So, very heartbreaking. Such a horrible way to die. 💔😭 Praying for the families. 🙏🏼📖🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼📖📖📖📖
@DakotaFord592Ай бұрын
There needs to be a KZfaq video about that story!!! You need to make that video and bring that girl's name to light!!!! ❤❤❤❤ You have the power and you have the knowledge.
@cherylsmith4826Ай бұрын
That's awful. I cry for her
@curlybibliophagistАй бұрын
I remember this.
@thedieseldietАй бұрын
Tell me more!!! @@curlybibliophagist
@blackgarmentbag7482Ай бұрын
Can they release these people into the neighborhood of either the judge or one of the parole board members to live?
@OsceolaNola7Ай бұрын
Usual suspects 👱🏼♂️
@robertclark5874Ай бұрын
Lol, I like this idea! They have to live next door to the parole board for the 1st year of release!
@jiveturkey365Ай бұрын
They all live in high income gated communities. Good luck with that
@ResinAlchemist2024Ай бұрын
My son was abducted in elementary school. The guy who did it was sentenced to 15 years. This was in 2015. Well in 2019 I was grocery shopping with my son and guess who we literally ran into in the deli section. Him! My son was not scared he was angry, I was livid. He was paroled for four years. Not only that but I was obsessive about making sure they had our address, current phone numbers, even my work number since it was Court ordered we be giving a chance to be present at every parole hearing, able to make a statement to the board regarding whether or not we felt he should be released, if after the hearing the board decided to approve his parole they were required to give us advanced notice of his release. Tall about a slap in the face, they never even bothered to adhere to any of that. They blamed the pandemic. Thankfully after I loudly told him to stay away from my son and announced loud enough for all to hear what he did, we never saw him again. I found out 2 years later he fled the state with an underaged girl(surprise surprise he kidnapped another child). He was caught in Idaho and sent back to prison for violating his parole. He was also charged with kidnapping a minor, convicted, and sentenced to another 15 years plus the balance of his original sentence for violating his parole. Let's see how long he stays incarcerated this time. I'm not holding my breath, nor do I trust the justice system anymore. It's honestly laughable.
@pla5730Ай бұрын
@@ResinAlchemist2024😮😮😮 unbelievable!! Im sorry for your son and family.. let's pray he stays in this time 🙏🏼🤞🏼
@user-hf7ue4if4pАй бұрын
Victims families should sue courts.
@kevin982Ай бұрын
I don't care if a mandatory decision. Taking a life or taking someones innocence should be life in prison and never released or capital punishment.
@MonGoalianАй бұрын
AMEN!
@coryproffitt8676Ай бұрын
So pony up alot more in taxes then!
@Psy0psAgentАй бұрын
@@coryproffitt8676 don't think that's how it works. Tax barely pays a portion on interest. Fiat currency is printed out of this air. Hence the devaluing of currency. Also, bigger point, I believe I've heard the prison system is a privately owned, for profit corporation. So many misconceptions.
@coryproffitt8676Ай бұрын
@@Psy0psAgent Some prisons are privately owned, many are not. Half truths and misinformation is the currency of conservatism.
@jlcole300Ай бұрын
@@Psy0psAgent Agreed! I have heard American prisons are big business.
@heathercloete7450Ай бұрын
2 life sentences and he gets out???? 😳
@James-he6pcАй бұрын
An accomplice who facilitates in a murder is charged with murder. And yet a judge or a parole officer who lets loose a scumbag to commit another murder bears ZERO responsibility. The system is truly fucked up man.
@maryannallen9885Ай бұрын
Why is someone that murders in cold blood ever, ever, ever let out of prison?🤬
@neomonk5668Ай бұрын
Why do we keep believing criminals can be ‘reformed?’
@philliphall5198Ай бұрын
Because people are stupid
@BoredmillenialАй бұрын
Because many of them can be. But our prison system doesn’t rehabilitate people. It just makes them more broken.
@chryssesandchaosАй бұрын
Coz of movies and tv series. Everyone has a sad back story and aren't truly evil.😅
@Wappo43Ай бұрын
@@Boredmillenialcan makes people worse tbh
@carolemayer6467Ай бұрын
We R STUPID!! PERIOD!!
@ocsrcАй бұрын
I am horrified that a killer was let out and he killed 3 more people. The system keeps non violent people in prison for life and lets murders go after a couple years Insanity
@judybertagna4527Ай бұрын
The justice system is broken. A murderer should not be let out on the street again.
@robertsmith2956Ай бұрын
keep looking. They were probably clients of his is why they did nothing.
@Ann-st8etАй бұрын
The law is on the side of the killers, not the poor people they murdered.
@JamesVenturaCaАй бұрын
This guy was a murderer, he killed in cold blood over nothing, for being caught stealing or attempting to steal, clearly such a person cannot ever be rehabilitated. 2 more lives taken when this man should have been rotting away in a cell. Total failure of our justice system
@poollife777Ай бұрын
What woman in her right mind would live with a man who just got out of prison. Much less a man who spent 20 years in prison and committed murder as a teenager? I don't see how she didn't see this coming. I'm very sorry this happened to those people. Ladies stay away from these prisoners they're not good men.
@PFlaw317Ай бұрын
Love After Lockup is popular..Lol..for some reason a lot of women are attracted to masculine 'presenting' men who are doing or have done serious time.
@ChildOfThe1970sАй бұрын
Some women are attracted to that bad boy element for some reason. I guess for the same reasons some men are attracted to the wild girls. Easy and loose with no moral boundaries. Sounds exciting until you get in too deep and then it's nothing but trouble.
@user-st6nt4ou6fАй бұрын
I have never understood this. So many women are involved with ex-cons and many are killed or family members,children are killed. What kind of thought process is involved. Or is it that there IS no thought, just lust? Or ? What?
@RepentfollowJesusАй бұрын
The prisoner murdered her husband. She didn't marry the killer
@frankberumen3661Ай бұрын
@@user-st6nt4ou6fyou should experience that type of relationship and get back with an update.
@elastotec173Ай бұрын
The judge that let him out should get a life sentence for incimpetence
@audiearmorer26863 күн бұрын
Judges..don't decide parole!
@dayciajtalk88Ай бұрын
These criminals should never be let out of prison!!!
@animusadvertere3371Ай бұрын
Ridiculous that teens are not held accountable. These are some of the most dangerous people in society.
@juneyshu6197Ай бұрын
Wors3 every day.
@ThestrongalwayssurviveАй бұрын
I was a teen and perfectly aware of my actions. They know what they're doing.
@youtubeuserzzzzАй бұрын
But, but, but their frontal lobe isn't fully developed yet. This is what Adolescent Psychologists say. Giving these teens an excuse. Adolescent Psychologists say the frontal lobe is fully developed for young women at 22. However for young men it was 22 also. Yet the number has been changing for young men over the years. Saying 25, then 26, then 28, and now that number for young men has been almost 30 years of age. Society has to wait for a young man to reach 30 years of age, to be aware of his criminal/lawless choices? I think not. Teens know exactly what they are doing. Adolescent Psychologists making these findings public, just sets up cases, to let these teen monsters go free after a crime.
@Doc5thMechАй бұрын
Maybe they should remain the most dangerous people in prison.
@georgeoy932Ай бұрын
They are he was served 20yrs not 20 days
@alesia912Ай бұрын
Mandatory parole is inappropriate clearly
@elhuddleston17Ай бұрын
These deaths are on the justice system.
@RUTHLESSambition5Ай бұрын
Wyte privilege back fires big time😂😂😂
@YaBoyJRock42069Ай бұрын
@@RUTHLESSambition5🗑️🗑️🗑️🗑️ Delete your save-file
@kscowgirlАй бұрын
My nephew killed his friend at 14. He's been in prison since 2011 he gets out in 2029. I always ask myself how he can be a normal person after he gets out.😢
@prockjohnАй бұрын
Once a psycho always a psycho. I wouldn't take him back as a family member. I know someone that almost killed someone over a car part. The victim survived.
@kscowgirlАй бұрын
@prockjohn unfortunately I think your right. He shot his friend in the back of the head and went home took a shower played Xbox then went to bed and went to school the next day like nothing ever happened. It saddens me to think he might do it again.
@whos1st2 күн бұрын
He can’t.
@zipseyАй бұрын
“The dear Lord is not done with you yet. You will get yours again, sometime.” Spoken like the gospel. God Bless Her Heart.
@MiriamdeLezo677Ай бұрын
A psychopath is always a psychopath,they never get better,they get worse. Justice system need to remember this and don't let them free.
@robertlange5587Ай бұрын
When these felons are released by Judges, what message is being sent? This soft on crime saga must be stopped, Americans deserve better...
@naysaynetwork5271Ай бұрын
The issue is that we allow people with money, immunity and influence to make a mockery of the system. Plus women get less time and for the longest your skin color allowed you to get away with anything. So what I believe is going on is a sort of “self correction” thats gone out of control. Like turning the wheel hard as your car is fishtailing.
@fakenmanАй бұрын
@@naysaynetwork5271 The pendulum does indeed swing. The correction to this correction is probably going to be messy.
@iMatti00Ай бұрын
But… Isn’t it interesting how many Scandinavian countries (like Switzerland and the Netherlands and such, And several EU countries like Germany) have dramatically lower prison sentences, nicer prisons, less crime, and once you get out of prison you’re recidivism rate is extremely low compared to the USA. A lot of those countries have an average prisons of no more than 11-14 years for murder. So if you had a choice between harsh punishments like in the USA but more crime and more repeat criminals, or a much softer system like in those countries I mentioned but society was much better off, which would you prefer? Would you prefer the emotional gratification a vengeance but it lead to more crime and more violence.c
@OsceolaNola7Ай бұрын
Usual suspects.
@moneyman24258Ай бұрын
What you expect everyone soft now they worried about trans bathrooms but not crime
@mrsTraveller64Ай бұрын
In Finland a life sentence is about 10-14 years... SICK!!!
@user-vk3qr5hy5fАй бұрын
Thats awful!...i am so Sorry!!!... Sending Blessings and Peace to all the families affected ! RIP 😢
@jorden3200Ай бұрын
Our court system is fucked, in all levels,
@iMatti00Ай бұрын
With all due respect, I don’t know if you and 38 other people didn’t completely pay attention to the video or don’t understand our system of government. The court system had absolutely nothing to do with him being released early. It reminds me of some thing that came out by people registering others to vote in Georgia and that how many of them were upset and disillusioned with the government but they didn’t even understand how different laws interacted with each other and how The president had nothing to do with what the state government was doing, vice versa, etc. Honestly it never even past my mind that people have such trouble with this, and the group that was talking about this mentioned how these people would not even ask questions because they either did not know that they didn’t understand or they were too embarrassed to admit it.
@Lincoln_Hawk23Ай бұрын
The district attorney needs to be held accountable
@captainobvious6070Ай бұрын
Ruled by patriarchy.
@jeanesingsjazzАй бұрын
that mandatory parole law needs to be revoked. Somebody needs to get legislation in there soon to remove it.
@DoudDАй бұрын
Yeah, but I guess you missed the part about the US Supreme Court issuing a ruling that agrees with the state. So somebody is going to have to get the Supreme Court to issue a different ruling.
@garfield2439Ай бұрын
I'm going to do some research and fight to have that law changed
@Harlem55Ай бұрын
@@DoudD Something which most likely wont happen.
@DoudDАй бұрын
@@Harlem55 I think it will happen within the next couple years. I think the court is primed and waiting for someone to bring the right case at the right time
@kelvinmorris1991Ай бұрын
What about those in prison for crimes they didn’t commit????
@richardschaffling9882Ай бұрын
Who ever released this murderer should be in prison
@deniseb4426Ай бұрын
Sue the parole board.
@antonchigurh3794Ай бұрын
So , enlighten me with your legal acumen…. If a Bartender can be charged as an accessory for over serving someone at a bar that is involved in an injury or fatal accident after they leave said bar …. Then why can’t a Judge or D.A. be held accountable for releasing someone who re-offends? The Court has the paperwork in front of them , informing them of the history of the offender. A Bartender isn’t privy to that same info for the hundreds of people they serve each night. How is that justified ?
@sz6738Ай бұрын
Well not hard to figure this one out. Break the law you go to jail. Releasing someone after they served time for breaking the law is not a crime
@SparkyTuttleАй бұрын
Here's a trick for you, I don't know if one bartender who ever went to prison over this law. It's threatened but not really upheld. Now, I'm sure there has to be some bartender who served time, I just don't know if any that did. In this particular case, the Supreme Court changed the law involving minors. They stated that less than 1% ever return to prison. They did note that the longer the juvenile stays in prison, the better his chances. Everyone went by the law in this particular case. However, no one could have predicted he would do this, since he passes all of his testing. He learned how to convince others that he could be trusted. He convinced the parole board, just as I'm sure he convinced the lady he was living with.
@moniquej369Ай бұрын
@@sz6738But it should be a crime. That’s the point they were trying to make. The power is in the judges hands, so the judge should be held accountable for making poor choices that negatively affects the lives of others. Anyone who’s shown they have the ability to “unalive” someone will always be a threat to society.
@lovechangesusАй бұрын
My friend married a man whose teenaged son murdered his first wife, the mom. He was released and hangs out with my friend and his dad. I just can't wrap my mind around it.
@sbffsbrarbrrАй бұрын
Wow, that is a sick triangle.
@Roger-wf8sjАй бұрын
My second cousin's mother's brother's girlfriend uncle's daughter got in trouble once
@marinamartinez6886Ай бұрын
Wow, I wouldn't be able to sleep at night. 😮
@yellowblanka6058Ай бұрын
@@thehumblehummingbirdSeriously - I would not hang around with anybody who showed such an incredible lack of judgement. Yikes.
@youtubeuser5524Ай бұрын
@@sbffsbrarbrrsounds like foul play, possible the child being groomed by the father to do his evil deed
@ObeijinАй бұрын
Killers should NEVER be released .
@Rt-ig4bkАй бұрын
Any child disturbed enough to commit murder, will NEVER get better as an adult.
@newlion7013Ай бұрын
The POS who let him go need to be held accountable, enough is enough!!!!
@Scarey1933Ай бұрын
Did he ever have a psychiatric evaluation? Sociopath?
@dmo7815Ай бұрын
That was part of the prison program plus education, job training. This was stated in this video.
@cherylkelley558612 күн бұрын
As a nurse who has worked with adolescents, the "system" doesn't want to label "children" as sociopaths, psychopaths, schizophrenic. And as another person commented, some people are just born bad. The "nature" versus "nurture" argument continues. The bleeding heart social workers/psychologists/psychiatrists just can't bring themselves to label these patients as unfixable.
@desert_moon5 сағат бұрын
@@cherylkelley5586I'm reading a book on this very thing right now. The truth is they do show signs of it in childhood and we need to start paying attention and taking that seriously.
@michellew4737Ай бұрын
These judges need to be held accountable for letting these criminals out back on the streets.
@mariapyrc6862Ай бұрын
Sue the parole board
@tracymorgan53865 күн бұрын
These women especially with children should avoid getting involved with someone with a murder record.
@sandraconnelly7507Ай бұрын
Something terribly wrong with this young man.....and the Justice System keeps getting it wrong...dead wrong.
@tedcollins4684Ай бұрын
Don't understand how a murderer ever get out.
@OsceolaNola7Ай бұрын
Usual suspects.
@blackgarmentbag7482Ай бұрын
Apparently, being a teen makes the murder less serious🤦🏾♂️🤷🏾♂️
@frednovaes5888Ай бұрын
Do you understand democrats?
@Matt-xv2cpАй бұрын
@@OsceolaNola7 Yes, Democrats.
@danielwhite2746Ай бұрын
He's white that's y he got out.
@kiryuunaga1olivians100Ай бұрын
When the law protects criminals more than victims of crime
@ramonsmediablogАй бұрын
What!! That’s insane!!
@AliciaGuitarАй бұрын
i grew up with a pychopath kid, he tortured animals, set fires, and everything. By age 16 he murdered someone. He was about to get out because of these laws when he escaped and was caught after a manhunt. Now he isn't getting out any time soon. I think he knew he belonged in prison. Why else do something so stupid right before you are about to be released? He probably runs his cell block and didn't want to give it up. Too bad all the bad guys don't sabotage their own releases like that.
@sakitoby1581Ай бұрын
Agree 100%. I was in a massive jury pool to pick jurors for a guy's post-murder conviction penalty phase, which was to be either execution or life w/o parole. The killer had r'd and m'd a woman when he was younger. Served a few yrs, got out. Don't you just love how some of them get a freebie?? He was only more evil & dangerous then. He now went for easier targets...abducted, r'd and k'd two little boys ages 6 & 9. His fam said all his life, he had been a textbook psycho case, exactly like you described. I mean these nuts follow the same script, I swear. His fam even knew he wasn't right and had tried to seek help, get him locked up bec they knew he'd become a killer and they were right. But of course authorities would/could do nothing preventative. I wasn't picked for the jury thank GOD bec I didn't want to see the photos and hear the details... But just sitting in that courtroom with him seeing him sit there blankly, like an empty shell of what should have been a human being, it was so gross. He was ultimately sentenced to death but he'll die a natural death in prison. The few states that have dp don't even carry it out much anymore. So our tax dollars get to feed and house these wastes of skin for their entire lives. Sad.
@emptyempty8310Ай бұрын
His body should have been donated to medical science the first time around. This mandatory probation madness has got to end asap.
@milomoore9450Ай бұрын
Prayers and love are needed more than ever now...
@PAMELAPORTER-ci7mrАй бұрын
A serial killer at a young age.
@searchanddiscoverАй бұрын
why can't these people just skip to the last step rather than take others with them?
@toebeans3985Ай бұрын
Why is this country so damn lenient on criminals? Earth truly is a hell planet.
@markieffmorris9263Ай бұрын
@@toebeans3985bit melodramatic wouldn’t you say 😂
@user-wt9it5zz2qАй бұрын
@@markieffmorris9263 Not if you are paying attention to the world around you.
@indigostarazАй бұрын
If he received two life sentences the parole board should have held him for another twenty years. At least.
@terrymcchesney383Ай бұрын
That parole board is 100% liable for what happened.....what a crock
@MegaAppl3Ай бұрын
These kids don't deserve a second chance anymore.
@florencecantero857Ай бұрын
Some people cannot just be rehabilitated - just born bad
@racheltabron2086Ай бұрын
That is horrible! He never should have been let out!
@bocagoodtimes1460Ай бұрын
Are you kidding? Anyone who is a murderer should never be set free....forgiveness....heck no! You don't forgive Evil Deeds.
@johnnykeener3727Ай бұрын
Worthless Justice System!!!
@iMatti00Ай бұрын
Is it also must be a worthless medical system because doctors don’t get it right 100% the time either. And my sanitation/garbage department in my city is pretty good, but they did miss my trash once. So they’re not perfect either. So I guess that’s a worthless system. I guess I’m kind of crazy because I do this little thing called actually think about the real world and I understand that humans are never going to get every decision correct. It’s about designing the system that does the best the most amount of time, and then trying to follow through with that system the best we’re able to.
@donteatdirt200Ай бұрын
What do you expect from Democrats
@PossessedNoodleАй бұрын
@@iMatti00are you seriously comparing the weight of deciding that a predator be released to live amongst an often defenseless and ignorant population, to the tragedy of medical error (which as a retired healthcare professional, I can testify, comes with an enormous amount of guilt and cost for those who are at fault in such often unpredictable and other times shameful situations), to…. Unreliable waste collection from a sanitation company? What!? (If you want to apples to oranges the scenarios at least put them in the same orchard… for instance… Even the sanitation worker gets reprimanded or fired if they have caused the death or injury to coworkers or public…) The number of predators which our laws and justice system continue to coddle and release back only to harm even more people is an entirely different crime itself, and those determining the fates of all these people are seldom if ever effected by their decisions… their lives and livelihoods continue on, same old, same old…
@oahuhawaii2141Ай бұрын
@iMatti00: I agree with you when you say you're crazy.
@iMatti0024 күн бұрын
@@PossessedNoodle- I appreciate that you’re trying to think and be reasonable. But let me point out a couple things. This comment said Justin system is “worthless“. Not this is a mistake, they said it was worthless. Second, why is it that so many Norden countries and European countries have sentences for murder that are typically not more than 14 years, and their recidivism rate is astronomically lower than ours? Doesn’t that tell us that letting someone out a prison early is not a problem in of itself? We as Americans are raised to believe that people need to be in prison for the longest amount of time in prison needs to be as uncomfortable as possible. And believe me, if someone hurts me I want that exact thing for them. But if someone I love hurt someone else, I want the opposite. So which is right? Is it right to give somebody a second chance, or is it right throwaway the key? Or does it just all depend on what we want at the moment? So if we can rehabilitate someone then isn’t that the best thing to do. And considering that other countries are able to do it much better than us with much less punishment, does that mean that something else is wrong here?
@justdoingitjim7095Ай бұрын
He got TWO life sentences! When a criminal hears the judge give them life, they automatically know they'll be out a lot earlier than that!
@sweatypits8315Ай бұрын
So given that a family just got 15 years for a crime their son had done (School shooting) Will the judge that let this heap of shit out face any consequences?
@annazaman965727 күн бұрын
I'm not in favor of parole for violent crimes, no matter the age
@jujub4553Ай бұрын
A life sentence for a life taken.
@tomrogers4667Ай бұрын
These judges need to be held accountable for this shit.
@lindsayo9702Ай бұрын
The judge did his job and sentenced him to TWO life terms which was the max he could have gotten. The Supreme Court overturned life sentences for people who were minors when they were sentenced. So, he and others were going to get out anyway. The parole board could have delayed him a little longer but he was going to have to be released since his sentence was no longer a life sentence.
@kerriemacon5494Ай бұрын
Good morning and im wishing everyone a blessed day whos living in this hell of a place called las Vegas.
@vynidalopes251Ай бұрын
We have such a pathetic so called justice system. Lock away the innocent for decades for a crime they didn't commit. But allow the perpetrator to go free again and again!
@richardkiltz6370Ай бұрын
He should have never been released!!!
@bobjenkins9736Ай бұрын
You can't blame parole board on something mandatory. Not notifying victims is another story.
@Unmei_KaАй бұрын
It's only mandatory to have the parole hearing. They were still allowed to deny his parole and have him stay in prison.
@AliciaGuitarАй бұрын
@@Unmei_Ka that is not how the article put it. the second law didn't give them choices and the parole hearing was just a formality. unless the news lied.. which is entirely possible
@Unmei_KaАй бұрын
@@AliciaGuitar Oh, you're right. I misunderstood. I thought the hearing was mandatory. I didn't realize he automatically got parole. That's insane.
@oahuhawaii2141Ай бұрын
@AliciaGuitar: Not exactly. The parole board relied on some accepted guidelines that use a few nebulous metrics in deciding that he likely won't reoffend if he's released. It has to rely on other folks (psychologists, sociologists, equity advocates) to provide "professional" assessments and recommendations.
@robertsmith2956Ай бұрын
but show the judge how you attacked your victim in court and they won't let you out.
@shpidermonky6443Ай бұрын
Need to start holding judges and these people accountable
@jjthomas3241Ай бұрын
Parole boards are notorious for not informing those who they claim they will.
@watsonspuzzleАй бұрын
It's sad the stakes are so high when the parole system decides to roll the dice on people's lives.
@gasmith7486Ай бұрын
Based on a score. Ridiculous!!
@MagpieAnnie73Ай бұрын
They can and should request critical risk assessment by a psychologist They must be getting slack ass getting them done now You can get all the certificates in youe files, but they don't have to complete the programs You can just attend a couple of classes and still get a certificate.
@oahuhawaii2141Ай бұрын
Well, in this case, the laws had been changed so that the teenager had to be released in 20 years, if some worthless process somehow determined he likely won't offend again.
@lisarogers1392Ай бұрын
Who ever let them out are guilty
@redbloodedbutterflyАй бұрын
It's not just a murderer being released after only 20 years that's the issue. How did he get a gun? Why was five days able to pass between the murder of the woman he was living with and the 2nd shooting? Why wasn't he arrested soon after the murder of the woman he lived with? RIP to the victims. Also, Marcy's Law needs to be amended asap. Victims shouldn't have to opt-in to being notified when an offender is released. It should be automatic.
@firstamendment2887Ай бұрын
I know this might be hard for you to comprehend, but people can buy guns.....ILLEGALLY!!!! 🤡
@jameshayden3952Ай бұрын
Heartbreaking yes, also 100% avoidable.
@brendaeaves1079Ай бұрын
Once A Killer😮Always A Killer😮This Makes Me Sick That He Got Out & Killed 2 Innocent People😢The Devil Has Many Faces
@rocbotum8Ай бұрын
WHAT A SURPRISE 🎉... SHAME ON OUR "CRIMINAL" JUSTICE SYSTEM 😢
@gasmith7486Ай бұрын
Keep voting blue and keep getting this.
@hangryturtle9006Ай бұрын
@@gasmith7486TRUTH
@joevarga5982Ай бұрын
Only 1% re-offend? I don't believe that for 1 second.
@user-re2xr3ni8uАй бұрын
Why would you think he’d kill again? 🙄🙄🙄
@kbennett531Ай бұрын
The board that released him should be liable
@donteatdirt200Ай бұрын
What do you expect from Democrats
@paulletathornhill1042Ай бұрын
The longer an imates stays in prison, the more they can't adjust to the changes and the struggles trying to support themselves it's hard 😢
@C.U.N.TahitiАй бұрын
Her pup is so sweet and calming
@acenavarro7314Ай бұрын
20 yrs is not enough for someone to change, stop giving parole period